Dan Young, whose IQ has been measured at 56, has slight comprehension of abstract concepts. He is also uncontrollably violent when left to his own devices and has accumulated a lengthy criminal record. The convictions now under review are for the rape and exceptionally brutal murder of Kathy Morgan. His detailed confession was corroborated by a confederate plus a match between Young’s dental pattern and a bite mark on Morgan’s body. He was sentenced to life imprisonment,
*848
which is essential to incapacitate Young (who appears to be undeterrable) and protect society. According to Young, however, his mental shortcomings prevent him from making effective confessions and require him to be freed, because he can’t understand the legal significance of
Miranda
warnings. What is more, Young now contends that the drugs used to render him calm enough for trial spoiled the adjudication — and his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not doing more to prevent a trial from occurring. The district court denied Young’s petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. See
Before trial three psychiatrists examined Young. All three concluded that he was fit for trial — which is to say that he had the mental capacity to understand the charges and assist his lawyer in presenting a defense. See
Drope v. Missouri,
Like the district judge, we do not think that the state courts contradicted the Supreme Court of the United States or applied constitutional law unreasonably to the facts. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d);
Woodford v. Visciotti,
— U.S. -,
A contemporaneous inquiry into competence is preferable to a belated one.
Pate v. Robinson,
Young never argued in either state or federal court that he was unfit for trial because he was unable to comprehend the proceedings. That, coupled with the judicial conclusion that Young was fit to participate, undercuts his argument that the confession must be suppressed. For
Godinez v. Moran,
Quite apart from the effect of Godinez is the finding of historical fact, made by the trial judge — and presumed correct under § 2254(e)(1) — that Young understood the Miranda warnings. The police who took the confession testified that they simplified the warnings for Young and that he appeared to understand the advice. Before the confession was signed, an assistant state’s attorney gave Young another set of amplified warnings and concluded that he understood his entitlement to stop the questioning and have counsel. The psychiatrists agreed that this degree of comprehension is possible for someone with a low IQ, if the warnings are made sufficiently simple and the suspect’s responses are elicited with care.
Young’s lawyers reply that comprehension of Miranda and the consequences of waiver requires abstract intelligence. Yet Young cannot count backward. He does not know which direction is “east” and thus cannot tell where the sun appears. Asked to name the Presidents since 1950, he answered “Washington” and “Lincoln.” He knows that winter means cold and snow but cannot explain what “seasons” are; He cannot describe a ship (which of course he does not encounter in daily life). His command of analogies and categories is poor; he can’t explain in what respects a dog is similar to a lion. But he knows that a “PD” in Illinois is a public defender, and he knows what a trial is for even though he cannot describe how. the jury works. *850 In other words, he has concrete knowledge suited to his occupation as a career criminal, but poor verbal skills, a low fund of general knowledge, and an inability to reason (or talk) abstractly.
Do these deficiencies mean that a person such as Young is unable to confess to a crime? If entitlement to talk to the police depends on capacity to reason abstractly about the legal system and understand the long-term consequences of one’s acts (such as the effect that a confession will have at trial), then the answer must be yes. See Morgan Cloud, George B. Shepherd, Alison Nodvin Barkoff & Justin Y. Shur,
Words Without Meaning: The Constitution, Confessions, and Mentally Retarded Suspects,
69 U. Chi. L. Rev. 495 (2002) (concluding that retarded suspects do not understand the legal significance of
Miranda
warnings or the consequences of confessions). Yet
Miranda
is not about abstract understanding, nor does the Constitution protect suspects against confessions that are made for reasons other than official coercion. See
Colorado v. Connelly,
That Young may have been unable to understand why a lawyer’s assistance might be important, as one of the psychiatrists concluded, is not legally material. Suspects need not know how legal skills could be employed 'to best advantage. That’s asking too much and is too far removed from the goal that Miranda warnings are designed to implement. It is sufficient if the suspect has enough mental capacity to make decisions in daily life. An infant, or a person so incompetent that a guardian had been appointed, would be a different matter; the legal system generally does not allow such persons to form contracts or otherwise bind themselves. Young, though, is among the great majority of adults who can live independent lives, and as part of those lives can make choices with effects both good and bad.
Perhaps the legal system should adopt additional rules to deal with suspects of limited intellectual abilities. But they are not now in place, nor has the Supreme Court concluded that rules of this kind are to be found in the Constitution. We have held that even teenagers can confess, and without the supervision or assistance of a supportive adult such as a parent. See, e.g.,
Hardaway v. Young,
Independent of Miranda and the concept of waiver, suspects have a right to be free of coercion. At trial Young contended inconsistently that the police had treated him well and that they had threatened to beat him. This raised a possibility that the confession was involuntary, a subject resolved adversely to Young by both the judge and the jury. Young does not contend that the state courts erred in handling his contention that the confession was involuntary. As for the relation between Miranda and low IQ: new rules must be put in place by statutes, rules, or decisions on direct appeal, not via collateral attack.
AFFIRMED
